A woman who got hepatitis B from diseased bone tissue tore into body-parts bootlegger Michael Mastromarino yesterday in Brooklyn court before the dentist-turned-ghoul was sent away for 18 to 54 years behind bars.

“Mr. Mastromarino’s sick, disgusting, appalling actions, all in the name of greed, have devastated my family to the point where we can never recover,” said Dayna Ryan, who received the tissue during spinal-fusion surgery.

Ryan, a mother of three and former college administrator, said she had to take early retirement.

“The defendant and myself are both 44,” she noted. “His criminal activities have subsequently sentenced me and my family to a lifetime of disease and financial hardship.”

Mastromarino, a New Jersey dentist, offered a brief apology, saying, “I’m deeply sorry for all the emotional pain I’ve caused the donor families and donor recipients.”

Thousands of people who got bone and tissue harvested by Mastromarino’s Biomedical Tissue Services must now undergo regular testing for such infectious diseases as AIDS and hepatitis. Much of the chopping took place at a Brooklyn funeral home.

Mastromarino underling Lee Cruceta, 35, pleaded guilty and is to get eight to 24 years for testifying against Chris Aldorasi, 36, who got nine to 27 years.

Joseph Nicelli, 52, who ran one of the funeral homes where bodies were carved up for spare parts, is awaiting trial.